Alumni & Giving

 

Thanks to donors like you, CCAS is creating

Access to transformative
opportunities.

 


Alumni and Giving

Philanthropy plays a vital role in shaping the success of GW’s Columbian College of Arts and Sciences. Alumni and donors are critical to our mission to create real-world impact through an engaged and inclusive liberal arts education, pioneering and innovative research and civic engagement. 

Through their achievement in communities that span the globe—and giving back through their time, talent and philanthropic support—our alumni and donors are the driving force behind GW’s legacy of excellence.

Giving Priorities

 

 

 


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Monumental CCAS Alumni

More Monumental Alumni


You Make a Difference

Alumnus John Sullivan (left) with CCAS Dean Paul Wahlbeck (right).

Alumnus’ $1.5 Million Endowment to Support Math Department

A $1.5 million bequest commitment by alumnus John Dixon Sullivan, BS ’76, MS ’83, will aid faculty, research and scholarly work in the Mathematics Department.

Conference panelists included (from left) former Washington Post correspondents Peter Osnos and Keith Richburg, Columbia University historian Lien-Hang Nguyen and former U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam Raymond Burghardt.

Lessons from Vietnam: Why the War Still Resonates Today

In a CCAS-sponsored event, historians, cultural experts and political and military leaders reflected on the Vietnam War’s global influence 50 years later.

GW parent Ulvi Kasimov (center) endowed a fund to support graduate fellowships in the Art Therapy Program.

$1 Million Gift Opens Doors for Artists Who Heal

GW parents Ulvi and Reykhan Kasimov gave $1 million to endow a fund supporting graduate fellowships in GW’s Art Therapy Program.

 

 

 

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“The Harlan Fellowship offered a focused and immersive experience, which deepened my understanding, enhanced my practical skills, and provided valuable networking opportunities. ... Hands-on engagement in a lab — beyond my class work — translates theoretical knowledge into tangible outcomes, empowering my academic and professional growth."

Margarita Kyza-Karavioti
Biological Sciences Major